
LATEST ADDITIONS
A Must-Have Rachmaninoff CD
It starts quietly enough, with a simple falling-fifth motif, but the first movement of Sergei Rachmaninoff's neglected Piano Sonata 1 develops into a work of epic proportions nearly 40 minutes in length, with haunting melodies, massive dynamic contrasts, and lush, sensual harmonies.
New Cantus CD from John Atkinson
Cotton Balls & Delicate Precision Instruments
My topic today is not the hardware that we use to reproduce sound, but the delicate precision instruments we use to detect it: our ears. Our enjoyment of musical sound is important enough to justify spending thousands of dollars on recordings, electronics, loudspeakers, and concert tickets. What is it worth to preserve your hearing so that you can continue enjoying great sound 10 or 20 years from now? I've been conducting an experiment for the last 30 years, at a cost of less than a penny a day. It began when I was 17.
Book Review: Sound Reproduction: Loudspeakers and Rooms
<B><I>Sound Reproduction: Loudspeakers and Rooms</I></B><BR>
By Floyd E. Toole. Focal Press (Oxford, England, UK, <A HREF="http://www.elsevier.com">www.elsevier.com</A>, footnote 1), 2008. Paperback, 550 pages, ISBN 978-0240520094. $49.95.
Sarah Witkowski's All-Time Most Epic Songs
Back in February 2008, senior contributing editor John Marks decided to hold <a href="http://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/208fifth/index.html">a competition</a>.
Leonard Cohen Talk
There has been a lot of Leonard Cohen talk going around the office this week. You will find out why when you receive your September issue of <i>Stereophile</i>. You will enjoy it, too, I am certain.
Leonard Cohen Talk
There has been a lot of Leonard Cohen talk going around the office this week. You will find out why when you receive your September issue of <i>Stereophile</i>. You will enjoy it, too, I am certain.
Not Even Jesus
Here in the office, I am (like most jerks in the corporate world) constantly juggling several tasks at once. Sometimes these tasks seem to have absolutely nothing to do with one another, and nothing to do with the making of a magazine. So it goes. To keep everything from crashing down at my nervous, trembling feet, I scribble little reminders on yellow Post-it notes and stick them to everything around me: Post-it notes on my computer screen, Post-it notes on my telephone, Post-it notes on my calendar, Post-it notes on my stapler, etc.
All Sorts of Awesome
A couple of months ago, I heard <a href="http://www.wnyc.org/news/articles/128092">an interesting segment on NPR</a> about Sam Hillmer's <a href="http://www.myspace.com/representingnyc">Representing NYC</a> project. Hillmer, a NYC school teacher, partners his students with indie-rock musicians to create hip-hop albums. The children are given an opportunity to express themselves and gain real experience in the art of commerce, while the musicians get to contribute to the working-class communities they've recently moved into.